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Re: R.I.P. Roy Thomas Baker

R.I.P. Roy Thomas Baker
April 30, 2025 07:11PM
I had missed the news of Baker's passing, but checked in on the Monk's website today and discovered this typically insightful remembrance:

[postpunkmonk.com]

As Monk says in his piece, Baker is most associated with Queen, but give me Candy-O and Panorama any day. Any guy who could craft albums that sounded so good you could ignore Ocasek's WTF lyrics was okay in my book.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 05/04/2025 08:44AM by breno.
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Re: R.I.P. Roy Thomas Baker
April 30, 2025 07:47PM
…And I was late to the game. His Wikipedia says he actually died on April 4th, but it wasn't announced until a week or two later. If I had to pick a fave rave RTB production it just might be "Clones [We're All]" for Alice Cooper! The comment thread on my posting is unusual because one commenter was the keyboard player/MD for Berlin 2000-2008 and liked "Clones [We're All]" so much he had made a great cover version and sent it along for good measure. So I embedded the link in his comment.

Former TP subscriber [81, 82, 83, 84]

[postpunkmonk.com]
For further rumination on the Fresh New Sound of Yesterday®
zoo
Re: R.I.P. Roy Thomas Baker
May 01, 2025 09:09AM
I looked on his Wikipedia page for a list of the albums he produced and came across a band I didn't know called Espionage. I found this on YouTube...watch and listen at your own risk:

Espionage - "The Sound of Breaking Hearts"
Bip
Re: R.I.P. Roy Thomas Baker
May 03, 2025 07:43AM
No risk involved in listening to Espionage… they’re the type of cheeseball no-name unheard-of new-wave / poorman’s-AOR that make up a shocking amount of my record collection….

For me as a listener, I’ve recently. had more fun finding these types of innocuous bands (who somehow got on major labels) instead of listening to Husker Du again!
Re: R.I.P. Roy Thomas Baker
May 03, 2025 11:13AM
Same here. The jury is still out on whether the internet has been a net positive or negative for mankind, but in my personal plus column, I love the ability to now go back and listen to vintage bands that either I knew of but didn't bother with at the time, knew of but it was impossible to find their records, or bands that I was completely unaware of and never would've known of their existence without the web.

I've especially enjoyed digging up obscure Eurosynth bands of the early 80s and C86 bands - both genres that the U.S. almost entirely missed out on except for a small handful of token bands.
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